by Jeff Long
“Look,” someone whimpered. “What did they do to his nose?”
Midcenter on the battered face was a ring unlike anything he’d ever seen before. This was no silvery Gen-X body piercing. The ring, three inches across and crusted with blood, was plugged deep in his septum, almost up into the skull. It hung to his bottom lip, as black as his beard. It was, thought Ike, utilitarian, large enough to control cattle.
Then he got a little closer and his repulsion altered. The ring was brutal. Blood and smoke and filth had coated it almost black, but Ike could plainly see the dull gleam of solid gold.
Ike turned to his people and saw nine pairs of frightened eyes beseeching him from beneath hoods and visors. Everyone had their lights on now. No one was arguing.
“Why?” wept one of the women.
A couple of the Buddhists had reverted to Christianity and were on their knees, crossing themselves. Owen was rocking from side to side, murmuring Kaddish.
Kora came close. “You beautiful bastard.” She giggled. Ike started. She was talking to the corpse.
“What did you say?”
“We’re off the hook. They’re not going to hit us up for refunds after all. We don’t have to provide their holy mountain anymore. They’ve got something better.”
“Let up, Kora. Give them some credit. They’re not ghouls.”
“No? Look around, Ike.”
Sure enough, cameras were stealing into view in ones and twos. There was a flash, then another. Their shock gave way to tabloid voyeurism.
In no time the entire cast was blazing away with eight-hundred-dollar point-and-shoots. Motor drives made an insect hum. The lifeless flesh flared in their artificial lightning. Ike moved out of frame, and welcomed the corpse like a savior. It was unbelievable. Famished, cold, and lost, they couldn’t have been happier.
One of the women had climbed the stepping-stones and was kneeling to one side of the nude, her head tilted sideways.
She looked down at them. “But he’s one of us,” she said.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Us. You and me. A white man.”
Someone else framed it in less vulgar terms. “A Caucasian male?”
“That’s crazy,” someone objected. “Here? In the middle of nowhere?”
Ike knew she was right. The white flesh, the hair on its forearms and chest, the blue eyes, the cheekbones so obviously non-Mongoloid. But the woman wasn’t pointing to his hairy arms or blue eyes or slender cheekbones. She was pointing at the hieroglyphics painted on his thigh. Ike aimed his light at the other thigh. And froze.
The text was in English. Modern English. Only upside down.
It came to him. The body hadn’t been written upon after death. The man had written upon himself in life. He’d used his own body as a blank page. Upside down. He’d inscribed his journal notes on the only parchment guaranteed to travel with him. Now Ike saw how the lettering wasn’t just painted on, but crudely tattooed.
Wherever he could reach, the man had jotted bits of testimony. Abrasions and filth obscured some of the writing, particularly below the knees and around his ankles. The rest of it could easily have been dismissed as random and lunatic. Numbers mixed with words and phrases, especially on the outer edges of each thigh, where he’d apparently decided there was extra room for new entries. The clearest passage lay across his lower stomach.
“ ‘All the world will be in love with night,’ ” Ike read aloud, “ ‘and pay no worship to the garish sun.’ ”
“Gibberish,” snapped Owen, badly spooked.
“Bible talk,” Ike sympathized.
“No, it’s not,” piped up Kora. “That’s not from the Bible. It’s Shakespeare. Romeo and Juliet.”
Ike felt the group’s repugnance. Indeed, why would this tortured creature choose for his obituary the most famous love story ever written? A story about opposing clans. A tale of love transcending violence. The poor stiff had been out of his gourd on thin air and solitude. It was no coincidence that in the highest monasteries on earth, men endlessly obsessed about delusion. Hallucinations were a given up here. Even the Dalai Lama joked about it.
“And so,” Ike said, “he’s white. He knew his Shakespeare. That makes him no older than two or three hundred years.”
It was becoming a parlor game. Their fear was shifting to morbid delight. Forensics as recreation.
“Who is this guy?” one woman asked.
“A slave?”
“An escaped prisoner?”
Ike said nothing. He went nose-to-nose with the gaunt face, hunting for clues. Tell your journey, he thought. Speak your escape. Who shackled you with gold? Nothing. The marble eyes ignored their curiosity. The grimace enjoyed its voiceless riddles.
Owen had joined them on the shelf, reading from the opposite shoulder. “RAF.”
Sure enough, the left deltoid bore a tattoo with the letters RAF beneath an eagle. It was right side up and of commercial quality. Ike grasped the cold arm.
“Royal Air Force,” he translated.
The puzzle assembled. It even half-explained the Shakespeare, if not the chosen lines.
“He was a pilot?” asked the Paris bob. She seemed charmed.
“Pilot. Navigator. Bombardier.” Ike shrugged. “Who knows?”
Like a cryptographer, he bent to inspect the words and numbers twining the flesh. Line after line, he traced each clue to its dead end. Here and there he punctuated complete thoughts with a jab of his fingertip. The trekkers backed away, letting him work through the cyphers. He seemed to know what he was doing.
Ike circled back and tried a string in reverse. It made sense this time. Yet it made no sense. He got out his topographical map of the Himalayan chain and found the longitude and latitude, but snorted at their nexus. No way, he thought, and lifted his gaze across the wreckage of a human body. He looked back at the map. Could it be?
“Have some.” The smell of French-pressed gourmet coffee made him blink. A plastic mug slid into view. Ike glanced up. Kora’s blue eyes were forgiving. That warmed him more than the coffee. He took the cup with murmured thanks and realized he had a terrific headache. Hours had passed. Shadows lay pooled in the deeper cave like wet sewage.
Ike saw a small group squatting Neanderthal-style around a small Bluet gas stove, melting snow and brewing joe. The clearest proof of their miracle was that Owen had broken down and was actually sharing his private stock of coffee. There was one hand-grinding the beans in a plastic machine, another squeezing the filter press, yet another grating a bit of cinnamon on top of each cupful. They were actually cooperating. For the first time in a month, Ike almost liked them.
“You okay?” Kora asked.
“Me?” It sounded strange, someone asking after his well-being. Especially her.
As if he needed any more to ponder, Ike suspected Kora was going to leave him. Before setting off from Kathmandu, she’d announced this was her final trek for the company. And since Himalayan High Journeys was nothing more than her and him, it implied a larger dissatisfaction. He would have minded less if her reason was another man, another country, better profits, or higher risks. But her reason was him. Ike had broken her heart because he was Ike, full of dreams and childlike naïveté. A drifter on life’s stream. What had attracted her to him in the first place now disturbed her, his lone wolf/high mountains way. She thought he knew nothing about the way people really worked, like this notion of a lawsuit, and maybe there was some truth to that. He’d been hoping the trek would somehow bridge their gap, that it would draw her back to the magic that drew him. Over the past two years she’d grown weary, though. Storms and bankruptcy no longer spelled magic for her.
“I’ve been studying this mandala,” she said, indicating the painted circle filled with squirming lines. In the darkness, its colors had been brilliant and alive. In their light, the drawing was bland. “I’ve seen hundreds of mandalas, but I can’t make heads or tails out of this one. It looks like chaos, all those lines a
nd squiggles. It does seem to have a center, though.” She glanced up at the mummy, then at Ike’s notes. “How about you? Getting anywhere?”
He’d drawn the oddest sketch, pinning words and text in cartoon balloons to different positions on the body and linking them with a mess of arrows and lines.
Ike sipped at the coffee. Where to begin? The flesh declared a maze, both in the way it told the story and in the story it told. The man had written his evidence as it occurred to him, apparently, adding and revising and contradicting himself, wandering with his truths. He was like a shipwrecked diarist who had suddenly found a pen and couldn’t quit filling in old details.
“First of all,” he began, “his name was Isaac.”
“Isaac?” asked Darlene from the assembly line of coffee makers. They had stopped what they were doing to listen to him.
Ike ran his finger from nipple to nipple. The declaration was clear. Partially clear. I am Isaac, it said, followed by In my exile/In my agony of Light.
“See these numbers?” said Ike. “I figure this must be a serial number. And 10/03/23 could be his birthday, right?”
“Nineteen twenty-three?” someone asked. Their disappointment verged on childlike. Seventy-five years old evidently didn’t qualify as a genuine antique.
“Sorry,” he said, then continued. “See this other date here?” He brushed aside what remained of the pubic patch. “4/7/44. The day of his shoot-down, I’m guessing.”
“Shoot-down?”
“Or crash.”
They were bewildered. He started over, this time telling them the story he was piecing together. “Look at him. Once upon a time, he was a kid. Twenty-one years old. World War II was on. He signed up or got drafted. That’s the RAF tattoo. They sent him to India. His job was to fly the Hump.”
“Hump?” someone echoed. It was Bernard. He was furiously tapping the news into his laptop.
“That’s what pilots called it when they flew supplies to bases in Tibet and China,” Ike said. “The Himalayan chain. Back then, this whole region was part of an Oriental Western Front. It was a rough go. Every now and then a plane went down. The crews rarely survived.”
“A fallen angel,” sighed Owen. He wasn’t alone. They were all becoming infatuated.
“I don’t see how you’ve drawn all that from a couple of strands of numbers,” said Bernard. He aimed his pencil at Ike’s latter set of numbers. “You call that the date of his shoot-down. Why not the date of his marriage, or his graduation from Oxford, or the date he lost his virginity? What I mean is, this guy’s no kid. He looks forty. If you ask me, he wandered away from some scientific or mountain-climbing expedition within the last couple years. He sure as snow didn’t die in 1944 at the age of twenty-one.”
“I agree,” Ike said, and Bernard looked instantly deflated. “He refers to a period of captivity. A long stretch. Darkness. Starvation. Hard labor.” The sacred deep.
“A prisoner of war. Of the Japanese?”
“I don’t know about that,” Ike said.
“Chinese Communists, maybe?”
“Russians?” someone else tried.
“Nazis?”
“Drug lords?”
“Tibetan bandits!”
The guesses weren’t so wild. Tibet had long been a chessboard for the Great Game.
“We saw you checking the map. You were looking for something.”
“Origins,” Ike said. “A starting point.”
“And?”
With both hands, Ike smoothed down the thigh hair and exposed another set of numbers. “These are map coordinates.”
“For where he got shot down. It makes perfect sense.” Bernard was with him now.
“You mean his airplane might be somewhere close?”
Mount Kailash was forgotten. The prospect of a crash site thrilled them.
“Not exactly,” Ike said.
“Spit it out, man. Where did he go down?”
Here’s where it got a little fantastic. Mildly, Ike said, “East of here.”
“How far east?”
“Just above Burma.”
“Burma!” Bernard and Cleopatra registered the incredibility. The rest sat mute, perplexed within their own ignorance.
“On the north side of the range,” said Ike, “slightly inside Tibet.”
“But that’s over a thousand miles away.”
“I know.”
It was well past midnight. Between their cafe lattes and adrenaline, sleep was unlikely for hours to come. They sat erect or stood in the cave while the enormity of this character’s journey sank in.
“How did he get here?”
“I don’t know.”
“I thought you said he was a prisoner.”
Ike exhaled cautiously. “Something like that.”
“Something?”
“Well.” He cleared his throat softly. “More like a pet.”
“What!”
“I don’t know. It’s a phrase he uses, right here: ‘favored cosset.’ That’s a pet calf or something, isn’t it?”
“Ah, get out, Ike. If you don’t know, don’t make it up.”
He hunched. It sounded like crazed drivel to him, too.
“Actually it’s a French term,” a voice interjected. It was Cleo, the librarian. “Cosset means lamb, not calf. Ike’s right, though. It does refer to a pet. One that is fondled and enjoyed.”
“Lamb?” someone objected, as if Cleo—or the dead man, or both—were insulting their pooled intelligence.
“Yes,” Cleo answered, “lamb. But that bothers me less than the other word, ‘favored.’ That’s a pretty provocative term, don’t you think?”
By the group’s silence, they clearly had not thought about it.
“This?” she asked them, and almost touched the body with her fingers. “This is favored? Favored over what others? And above all, favored by whom? In my mind, anyway, it suggests some sort of master.”
“You’re inventing,” a woman said. They didn’t want it to be true.
“I wish I were,” said Cleo. “But there is this, too.”
Ike had to squint at the faint lettering where she was pointing. Corvée, it said.
“What’s that?”
“More of the same,” she answered. “Subjugation. Maybe he was a prisoner of the Japanese. It sounds like The Bridge on the River Kwai or something.”
“Except I never heard of the Japanese putting nose rings in their prisoners,” Ike said.
“The history of domination is complex.”
“But nose rings?”
“All kinds of unspeakable things have been done.”
Ike made it more emphatic. “Gold nose rings?”
“Gold?” She blinked as he played his light on the dull gleam.
“You said it yourself. A favored lamb. And you asked the question, Who favored this lamb?”
“You know?”
“Put it this way. He thought he did. See this?” Ike pushed at one ice-cold leg. It was a single word almost hidden on the left quadricep.
“Satan,” she lip-read to herself.
“There’s more,” he said, and gently rotated the skin. Exists, it said.
“This is part of it, too.” He showed her. It was assembled on the flesh like a prayer or a poem. Bone of my bones / flesh of my flesh. “From Genesis, right? The Garden of Eden.”
He could sense Kora struggling to orchestrate some sort of rebuttal. “He was a prisoner,” she tried. “He was writing about evil. In general. It’s nothing. He hated his captors. He called them Satan. The worst name he knew.”
“You’re doing what I did,” Ike said. “You’re fighting the evidence.”
“I don’t think so.”
“What happened to him was evil. But he didn’t hate it.”
“Of course he did.”
“And yet there’s something here,” Ike said.
“I’m not so sure,” Kora said.
“It’s in between the words. A tone. Don’t you feel it
?”
Kora did—her frown was clear—but she refused to admit it. Her wariness seemed more than academic.
“There are no warnings here,” Ike said. “No ‘Beware.’ No ‘Keep Out.’ ”
“What’s your point.”
“Doesn’t it bother you that he quotes Romeo and Juliet? And talks about Satan the way Adam talked about Eve?”
Kora winced.
“He didn’t mind the slavery.”
“How can you say that?” she whispered.
“Kora.” She looked at him. A tear was starting in one eye. “He was grateful. It was written all over his body.”
She shook her head in denial.
“You know it’s true.”
“No, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Yes, you do,” Ike said. “He was in love.”
Cabin fever set in.
On the second morning, Ike found that the snow had drifted to basketball-rim heights outside the cave’s entryway. By then the tattooed corpse had lost its novelty, and the group was getting dangerous in its boredom. One by one, the batteries of their Walkmans winked out, leaving them bereft of the music and words of angels, dragons, earth drums, and spiritual surgeons. Then the gas stove ran out of fuel, meaning several addicts went into caffeine withdrawal. It did not help matters when the supply of toilet paper ran out.
Ike did what he could. As possibly the only kid in Wyoming to take classical flute lessons, he’d scorned his mother’s assurances that someday it would come in handy. Now she was proved right. He had a plastic recorder, and the notes were quite beautiful in the cave. At the end of some Mozart snatches, they applauded, then petered off into their earlier moroseness.
On the morning of the third day, Owen went missing. Ike was not surprised. He’d seen mountain expeditions get high-centered on storms just like this, and knew how twisted the dynamics could get. Chances were Owen had wandered off to get exactly this kind of attention. Kora thought so, too.
“He’s faking it,” she said. She was lying in his arms, their sleeping bags zipped together. Even the weeks of sweat had not worn away the smell of her coconut shampoo. At his recommendation, most of the others had buddied up for warmth, too, even Bernard. Owen was the one who had apparently gotten left out in the cold.